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Writing Instruction in the Twitter Age

The Institute for Excellence in Writing’s (IEW) mission is to “address issues relating to teaching, writing, thinking, spelling, and music with clarity, insight, practical experience, and humor.” The organization offers an extensive line of products to the homeschool market via a direct-mail print and web magalog, as well as their online store.

In the Fall of 2011, Central Creative again provided graphic design and production services to IEW, completing their 2012 “Arts of Language” school-division magalog in early November.

Although the base requirements of the project were consistent with previous efforts and included overall design and production of the 32 page magalog, this iteration included a decided shift in strategy that resulted in a comprehensive redesign of the magalog.

IEW’s product line is well-known by homeschool educators, but less-so in the traditional school market. The job given to CCG was to design a magalog that would introduce IEW and its products to professional educators while effectively communicating product-benefits to them. The underlying challenge associated with the job would be to earn the attention of teachers and administrators, keeping them from disregarding the magalog.

In response to this challenge, Henry Miersma and Samantha Allen of CCG worked with Julie Walker, Director of Marketing at IEW, to develop the concept of a “themed”, illustrated magalog. The concept would combine custom illustrations with age-appropriate, editorial-style articles that together would help communicate product benefits. These spreads were supported by layouts containing product photographs which were then overlaid by illustrations of traditional school supplies.

For this edition of the magalog, the theme of Teaching Writing in the Twitter Age was chosen. After brainstorming several ideas for themed-content, CCG turned to Joel and Ashley Selby of This Paper Ship to illustrate the ideas.

The concept is initially introduced on the cover of the magalog. There, a full-page illustration of a classroom depicts a dedicated teacher attempting to teach writing, only to have students distracted by friendly birds that just happen to be “tweeting” – a not-so-vague reference to the distractions of social media. Additional aspects of the theme, and its visual interpretations, are subsequently incorporated throughout the project.

Magalog Covers

Cover illustration depicting a dedicated teacher attempting to teach (writing, of course), only to have students distracted by friendly birds that just happen to be “tweeting” – a not-so-vague reference to the distractions of social media.

In total, CCG & This Paper Ship art directed two full-page illustrations and several of smaller sizes. The illustrations use a limited color palette ranging from pumpkin-orange to gray-blue, with colors correlating to particular age-level groups within IEW’s product line. This Paper Ship’s whimsical and friendly illustrations lead the reader through the purchasing process from Kindergarten to graduation, explaining product benefits relating to various age groups along the way.

Included in our art direction, CCG designed a flow chart in the beginning of the magalog to help the school administrator find the optimal product collections to start with. Information was kept at a minimum, focusing on whether the reader was looking to supply a single teacher, multiple, or a whole school, streamlining this process would help each reader become an actual IEW client.

Chart development. Starting with an Excel file of the chart’s needs, we worked through the information breaking it down into smaller pieces to better visual the main flow.

Chart development. Starting with an Excel file of the chart’s needs, we worked through the information breaking it down into smaller pieces to better visual the main flow.

Overall, the final results for IEW are a strategically-designed magalog which communicates product benefits to educators in a manner that is fun and fresh.

IEW Product Decision Guide

Final printed chart in the School Magalog, a guide for the administrators to choose products based on the amount of instructors who will use it.

Book Review: Rework

The cover appealed to my design aesthetic – clean, clear, modern.

In their new book titled “Rework”, the co-founders of 37signals, creators of online software Basecamp and Highrise (among others), offer business advice based upon their own personal experience. Though I’m not one to pick-up a book of this nature very quickly, I decided to give this one a shot. Here’s why:

To be honest, what initially caught my eye about “Rework”, the book written by Jason Fried and David Heinemeier Hansson, was its cover design. The background is flooded in flat black ink, with a large piece of crumpled-up paper centered in the middle of the front cover. The wad of paper has been spot varnished, so it stands out nicely against the flat black ink on the matte paper stock. The masthead is set in a modern, sans serif font using two colors to emphasize the title’s play on words. The masthead is also varnished and embossed. Bottom line, the cover appealed to my design aesthetic – clean, clear, modern.

The next thing that caught my eye were the phrases on the book’s back cover. Instead of a lengthy writeup, as many books have, Rework features 7 phrases set in uppercase type, with size and color used to lead the eye and provide variety in presentation. The phrases themselves did a good job of previewing the content of the book and piquing my interest.

For instance, the phrase “Underdo the Competition” is displayed quite prominently on the back cover. That made me wonder exactly that might mean. “ASAP is Poison” is also featured, and that one resonated immediately. So, between the cover design and content previews, I was hooked.

As for the content of the book, it is presented in short, concise chapters easily digested over the course of several hours. Chapters are divided by full-page, single color graphics that are simple, yet functional, and make it easy to follow where the authors are leading. One of my favorite chapters is titled “Meetings are Toxic” – couldn’t agree more.

Overall, Rework is a collection of no-nonsense, matter-of-factly presented ideas and exhortations that attempt to strip-down our processes to just the basics, at the same time stripping-away excuses we often cling-to that keep us from make something happen.

It’s really a book of common sense, and I recommend it.